I suckkkk someone help


Chessbrah’s habits speedrun, the Colle-Zukertort speedrun, and the queen’s gambit speedrun(new) which is nice if you are interested in learning the Colle-Zukertort or the queen’s gambit(it’s an opening/movie) then you should watch those speedrun series and the habits series too. I will let chessbrah explain the habits series. Explanation is the first part of ep. 1.
Remote Chess Academy: This YouTube channel is where you learn the middlegame stuff I talked about in #4 and the GM here explains it well and don’t forget this channel has a vid talking about the Colle-Zukertort too and endgames. This is the place where I recommend to search how to stop blunders.
Chess Vibes: Here is where you learn most of the small things that don’t matter as much as what Remote Chess Academy says, but all of the small things combined are more than what the YouTube channel Remote Chess Academy says combined and most endgame stuffs are here than other channels I have mentioned.

But didn't you just say this in the beginners forum: https://www.chess.com/forum/view/for-beginners/help-188
"...I wanna learn chess but I don’t wanna watch some man teach me it and it be boring"
You could give my youtube beginners study a try. It's 30 minutes. Hopefully it won't be boring for you. If you care about improving though, advice any of us give shouldn't be thought of as boring. Plus it's free - everyone who responds to you is freely giving their time, which is basically a gift. So appreciate it for what it is.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ae4vFL6lG8A

All you play is speed chess and you are playing way to fast.
Your last game. You lost in 8 moves and used a 1:25 and still had 8:35 left on the clock.

It's mostly about following key principles when playing. That approach helped me reach a 2000+ rating, and I teach others to do the same. You can learn them yourself as well. Here's an example of some chess principles: https://www.chess.com/article/view/principles-of-chess